And it's not at all related to their gun laws. I do give Bloomberg some credit here at least he is a consistent Bigot. Afterall how many think it's ok to do > 500K frisks of people per year for the crime of walking down the street(usually as a person of color)? Now how many people think it's ok when 94% of the people aren't arrested for anything? About 800 guns are recovered too, so roughly every 1000 people you stop and frisk you get ONE gun....YAY...hello police state...

The sad part of it is people allow it because they're not young, male and a person of color.... Hell if you want to frisk someone for walking down the street you should have a real reason for it...'suspicious' isn't a reason....especially when 94% of people you do it to clearly aren't committing a crime. Hell it would be like being able to arbitrarily search 20 houses because they 'looked suspicious' to find one crack house....

Talk to a teenager of color living in Harlem or the Bronx and chances are they will have a story to tell about life under "stop and frisk."

Known as a "250" within the New York Police Department, the right to stop, question and pat down anyone deemed reasonably suspicious is a Supreme Court-approved tactic available to law enforcement across the country.

But few departments in the world stop more people than the NYPD -- over 1.2 million in the last two years. And while black and Hispanic residents make up only 23 percent and 29 percent of the city's population respectively, 84 percent of recorded stops are young men of color and only around 6 percent of stops lead to an arrest, according to data the Center for Constitutional Rights obtained from the city.

The statistics have led to allegations of racial profiling in a class action lawsuit and more informally, in stories shared on the streets of the inner city.

"In that moment you are so scared," said 17-year-old Kasim Walters in describing one of the seven times he said he has been stopped by NYPD officers in his neighborhood of Flatbush, Brooklyn. "The first thing [I think] is, 'Am I going to get out of this alive?'"

But while acknowledging the "inconvenience" that comes with frisking hundreds of thousands of innocent people each year, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly credits the tactic with helping bring New York's crime rate to record lows.

In a rare interview on the topic, Kelly told "Nightline" that the racial breakdown of the statistics is misleading.

"It makes no sense to use census data, because half the people you stop would be women," Kelly said. "About 70 percent to 75 percent of the people described as committing violent crimes -- assault, robbery, shootings, grand larceny -- are described as being African American.

"The percentage of people who are stopped is 53 percent African American," he continued. "So really, African Americans are being under stopped in relation to the percentage of people being described as being the perpetrators of violent crime. The stark reality is that a crime happens in communities of color."

Lawmakers and activists hoping to decrease the number of inner-city 250's point out that of the hundreds of thousands of stops each year, 1.2 percent turn up a weapon. But New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg sees this as proof that stop-and-frisk works.

"Critics say the fact that we're 'only' finding 800 guns a year through stops of people who fit a description or are engaged in suspicious activity means that we should end stop and frisk," Bloomberg said in a fiery speech to NYPD leadership on Tuesday. "Wrong. That's the reason we need it -- to deter people from carrying guns. We are the first preventers."

But in Flatbush, Kasim Walters says this kind of aggressive "proactive policing" only drives a deeper wedge between residents and police. The shooting of teenager Kimani Gray there during a stop and frisk in March led to four days of angry protests and riots, even though officers insist Gray grabbed for a loaded .38 revolver later recovered from the scene.

Walters doesn't believe them.

"When things like this happen, there's no trust," he said. "The police are never going to get the benefit of the doubt. They're never going to get respect and it's because of (stop and frisk)."

"We are trying to save his life," Kelly said, when told of Walters' suspicion. "And we are trying to save the life of other young people who are disproportionately victimized on the streets of this city and other cities throughout America.

"We empathize with young people who may have been stopped and weren't doing anything illegal," he continued. "We ask them to understand that we are engaged in what we believe to be a life-saving process. And we hope they understand that."

"It makes no sense to use census data, because half the people you stop would be women," Kelly said. "About 70 percent to 75 percent of the people described as committing violent crimes -- assault, robbery, shootings, grand larceny -- are described as being African American.

"The percentage of people who are stopped is 53 percent African American," he continued. "So really, African Americans are being under stopped in relation to the percentage of people being described as being the perpetrators of violent crime. The stark reality is that a crime happens in communities of color."

Yup it is one of the sad truths...but it's a truth. Honestly I don't have an issue using race as a component of profiling, but personally I'd bet poverty has a stronger correlation than race with crime and disproportional people of color are in serious poverty especially in inner cities.

But when you're profiling and ~95% of the people you're stopping and searching are doing nothing wrong. That's when your profile sucks. You hit 50% of the time and I'd have less issue with this...hell hit 1/3 the time. But you're treating a bunch of people like they are criminals when 95% of the time they're not. That's the problem to me.

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